The Very Pink Notebook wishes a fantastic publication day to
Kaela Coble for Friends and Liars.
Published by Atlantic Books (Corvus)
01 June 2017
Copy : Paperback received from publisher
The Blurb
It has been ten years since Ruby left her hometown behind. Since then she's built a life away from her recovering alcoholic mother and her first love, Murphy. But when Danny, one of her estranged friends from childhood, commits suicide, guilt draws Ruby back into the tumultuous world she escaped all those years ago.
She's dreading the funeral - and with good reason. Danny has left a series of envelopes addressed to his former friends. Inside each envelope is a secret about every person in the group. Ruby's secret is so explosive, she will fight tooth-and-nail to keep it hidden from those she once loved so deeply, even if that means risking everything...
She's dreading the funeral - and with good reason. Danny has left a series of envelopes addressed to his former friends. Inside each envelope is a secret about every person in the group. Ruby's secret is so explosive, she will fight tooth-and-nail to keep it hidden from those she once loved so deeply, even if that means risking everything...
The Very Pink Notebook Review
Friends and Liars, the debut novel by Kaela Coble, follows the web of lies and deceit woven by a group of childhood friends, Ruby, Murphy, Ally, Emmet and Danny who promised each other they would always be honest. But when one of the friends suddenly dies, the past is not going to stay buried. Forced together for the funeral deceased Danny leaves one final act of love or is it hate? In five letters - each addressed individually to the members of the group (or The Crew as they liked to call themselves) their biggest secret is revealed - but how does Danny know all of these? And why is he forcing them to face what they have worked so hard to keep hidden?
These are all questions that are investigated throughout the course of the novel. The reader is mainly given the viewpoint of Ruby to journey with both in 'now' and 'back then'. Ruby is the one that got away, the one who left and never looked back. However, the voices of the only other female of the original group Ally, and Steph the girlfriend of one of the boys is also introduced to give a better all round picture.
And that is how this novel seems to work, it starts as a murky picture with lots of unclear edges, and gradually as each secret is slowly revealed you start to build up a full picture of what life was like for the group as they grew up and eventually went their separate ways into adulthood and thus come forth the secret revelations, the fall outs of those and the eventual acceptance that you never really know everything about anyone.
Coble holds the suspense well but gives you enough snippets to keep you engaged and wanting to know more. The big secrets are Ruby and Murphy's so these of course are the last to be revealed, but you are given hints and indications as to what they might be (some red herrings, some not) from quite early on. The writing flows nicely with good dialogue and use of environmental description of the small town in which they group up and to which Ruby has had to return to the funeral, in helping to heighten the constant feeling of entrapment finds herself in now she has returned.
What I also liked about this novel was the use of the characters past to help paint the picture as to why things happened. Sometimes in novels this is used briefly but by the 'now' and 'back then' alternating chapters you get to see whole scenes played out and you need this to really understand why the group were so needy for 'The Crew' to be just that. They all needed the extra support of one another, but as a teenager, was it all just too close and intense?
I loved that the opening and final chapter is written from the viewpoint of Danny, looking around at the others from his place beyond the grave and I liked his very distinct style, it fits perfectly with his character as is portrayed throughout. The tone for the start and then the end, I really enjoyed, a very satisfactory ending.
Friends and Liars is an enjoyable read and I would recommend it heartily. Therefore it receives a Very Pink Notebook rating of :
About the Author
Kaela Coble is a member of the League of Vermont Writers, a voracious reader, and a hopeless addict of bad television and chocolate. She lives with her husband in Burlington, Vermont, and is a devoted mother to their rescued chuggle, Gus. Friends and Liars is her first novel.
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